It’s a slippery slope. I mean, I want a new job. But at the same time, I don’t want all that info out there. What says you?

31 points

Privacy shouldn’t drastically affect your life to the point where you cannot pursue a career and establish yourself.

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That’s how I see it, too.

First make it so you can eat. Then you can deal with any privacy holes you need to fill.

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4 points
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It doesn’t take much. I once put my name, job title and employer on LinkedIn. That was enough for someone to email my payroll officer and convince them to change my paycheck to a different bank account. I had no idea until my pay was missed.

My payroll officer was a dumbfuck, but that’s all it took.

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3 points

That seems a bit…odd? I feel like there’s more to the story than just that.

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2 points

i could add more detail, but it just raises further questions.

  • The payroll officer was emailed from an aol.com address, not the company email domain.

  • The bank account was changed to a branch in another state, several thousand kilometres away.

  • My office was physically next to the payroll officer. Despite sitting 2 metres away, I was not contacted in-person at any stage.

  • At least two staff members oversaw this.

  • They just wrote off the money and paid me for the month again.

This triggered a policy change. Bank account updates had to be confirmed in-person after that.

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10 points
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Don’t ad. Apply direct. Separate email, number, name, always.

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1 point

FWIW (overlooking the privacy issues w/ using Google, yes), you can generally add a + followed by <a string of your choosing> between your <email account name> and the “@gmail.com” to somewhat filter results internally (and maybe even tag the source of your email getting leaked/sold. /my2¢

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8 points

Just share the information that other people need to know and don’t share things they don’t need to know. Most people on LinkedIn have a worksona anyway, they’re not sharing their personal life much

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1 point

Do not put unnecessary information in and use privacy nightmare websites/software (like LinkedIn) with maximum sandboxing and protection possible (WM, VPN, probably Tails). If your job requires you to use some app, get a separate device for it (though I still wouldn’t pick such a job).

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2 points
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https://blog.nowhere.moe/opsec/internetsegmentation/index.html keep it confined in your “Public use” VM, since you’re using your real world identity

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1 point

QubesOS makes this very simple, but I would argue that all your web browsing should be done in a disposable VM.

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Privacy

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